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The core-to-edge opportunity in SA

By Kirsten Doyle

Johannesburg, 10 Oct 2022
Ayotunde Coker.
Ayotunde Coker.

The pandemic, while disastrous for businesses and economies alike, was also a massive enabler for cloud and digital transformation initiatives in every industry in SA.

However, to optimise the usage of digital solutions, decentralising structures and organising workloads according to business demands through edge computing is key, as the edge reduces the distances travelled by data, which, in turn, shrinks latency to the minimum and greatly enhances network stability.

This is driving a rapid growth in hybrid architecture, central to which are colocation data centre facilities, as these data centres are closer to organisations and are providing the modern infrastructure needed to realise these productivity gains.

ITWeb Cloud & Data Centre Summit 2022

This year’s event will examine the relationship between data centres, cloud and DevOps in accelerating change, with several international and local experts presenting on a wide range of enterprise-critical topics, such as the state of data centres in Africa, simplifying cloud adoption journeys, multi-cloud, enterprise agility, DevSecOps, and many more. For more information and to register, click here.

To unpack what is happening in this area in SA, Dr Ayotunde Coker, CEO of Open Access Data Centres, will be presenting on the core-to-edge opportunity in South Africa, at The ITWeb Cloud & Data Centre Summit 2022 to be held on 1 November.

This session will cover client demand for colocation and other data centre services in South Africa, as well as challenges with existing data centre deployment models.

In addition, it will discuss the need for content delivery to the edge and for edge pre-processing of data, as well as the place of edge data centres in South Africa's digital ecosystem.

However, to optimise the usage of digital solutions, decentralising structures and organising workloads according to business demands through edge computing is essential, as the edge reduces the distances travelled by data, which, in turn, shrinks latency to the minimum and greatly enhances network stability.

This is driving a rapid growth in hybrid architecture, central to which are colocation data centre facilities, as these data centres are closer to organisations, and are providing the modern infrastructure needed to realise these productivity gains.

To unpack this idea further, Dr Ayotunde Coker, chief executive officer, Open Access Data Centres, will be presenting on “The core-to-edge opportunity in South Africa: right-sizing for client needs”, at the The ITWeb Cloud & Data Centre Summit 2022 to be held at The Capital on the Park, on 1 November

He will cover client demand for colocation and other data centre services in South Africa, challenges with existing data centre deployment models.

In addition, he will discuss the need for content delivery to the edge and for edge pre-processing of data, as well as the place of edge data centres in South Africa's digital ecosystem. 

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